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The moment of surrender is the inflection point of faith. Will You catch me? Forgive me? Heal my broken heart? I believe You will.

Notes we've received

...Through the past five years, I have felt that, sometime, somewhere, something was going to touch my heart and help me get past all of the hurdles that I, myself, had put between me and the Lord. Last night I had the feeling that this was it.

– -DiAnn R.

I'm not an art expert, but I do know it touched me in a very personal way. I hope millions of people around the world will have the opportunity to view this powerful display.

– Bill H.

I feel that the pictures you took capture the life and love of Christ and they have truly spoken to me. Unfortunately I have always felt a distance from previous images of Christ in that he is rarely depicted smiling. It is the pictures of Him and John the Baptist smiling that speaks to me the most.
I don't know what else to say other than that I have truly been touched by your work and hope that the spirit I have felt tonight will stay with me and help me rebuild...

– R.B.

Blog posts

This week we released an image from the archive that had never been seen before. We're offering 20% of any canvas or gallery wrapped canvas of Be Not Afraid. They will begin shipping in October. Use the code: benotafriad2017
Thanks!
Mark

One of the top 10 nights of my life was on Jan 17, 2008 when David and Darelyn Peterson put together a Reflections of Christ gallery opening at the Mesa Temple Visitor Center. About 700 people showed up that night. (I'll probably tell more stories about that later)
One of the highlights of that entire exhibit though was the night before the opening when we had just finished hanging the art and turning on the music... we just sat in the exhibit and were a little emotional at seeing it all come together.
I'm not sure who took this picture, but thanks.
The exhibit was unbelievable. My brother-in-law Kim Eaton volunteered to build walls with soffits and lights. He wasn't allowed to put anything "permanent" so he floated the walls on foam and held it all in place with one screw in the ceiling.
Rob Brinton, the most talented framer I've ever met, donated the framed exhibit. He nailed it. Each piece framed perfectly for what it represented.
Music and film were so important, but I'm going to blog about those later.